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	<title>Pif Magazine &#187; ung lee</title>
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	<description>The Arts and Technology Magazine</description>
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		<title>Light and Shadow</title>
		<link>http://www.pifmagazine.com/2001/10/light-and-shadow/</link>
		<comments>http://www.pifmagazine.com/2001/10/light-and-shadow/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Oct 2001 08:01:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ung lee</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Macro-Fiction]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pif_wp.test/?p=23</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
         It&#8217;s a bright gray afternoon, air vivid and bristling with that light
         just before a snowstorm. The salt on the sidewalk sparkles beneath
         Alex&#8217;s boots. The rush hour sounds fade [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>         It&#8217;s a bright gray afternoon, air vivid and bristling with that light<br />
         just before a snowstorm. The salt on the sidewalk sparkles beneath<br />
         Alex&#8217;s boots. The rush hour sounds fade as she heads north, cutting<br />
         across the huge park that bisects the city. An oasis in a desert of<br />
         metal and cement, she thinks. She climbs an embankment and makes her<br />
         way through a stand of trees to a long field. Silence clings to her;<br />
         she imagines it dripping from the bare trees and coating her in an icy<br />
         balm. The hypnotic <i>flash flash flash</i> of her black boots across<br />
         dead grass and drifting snow. There are occasional puckered clumps of<br />
         white where the snow had settled, then melted, in a warm spell after<br />
         the last storm.</p>
<p>         Strange how her body reacts to the cold, precious liquids seeping out<br />
         like some internal melting. The wind brings tears to her eyes, makes<br />
         her nose run. When she breathes in deeply, the air seems to bypass her<br />
         prickling nose and go straight into her lungs, warmed only by the<br />
         beating of her heart as she crunches across the icy field. Gradually<br />
         something unfolds in her chest, like a fist unclenching, something<br />
         soothed by her rapid progress across the field. Her eyes fixed on the<br />
         horizon, a watery band of evergreen beneath smoky blue, Alex sinks<br />
         into a familiar, formless stream of images: the frozen wind&#8217;s gnawing<br />
         translates into wolfish teeth at her cool neck, a morbid fairy-tale<br />
         scene, white, black, red. Girl in a jet coat on ivory snow, something<br />
         silent at her throat and the scarlet surprise of a kiss. Ex, ex, ex,<br />
         and â€“ <i>Oh</i>. How it presses, presses so the hot love gushes up; she<br />
         imagines the relief of that dark eruption.</p>
<p>         She knows it&#8217;s silly, comical even, but Alex always imagines it the<br />
         same way, the profound, polar silence that would follow this draining<br />
         kiss: crawling into a giant freezer and stretching out among the hoary<br />
         vegetables and mysterious cold-burned packages of meat, just another<br />
         shining form blind and dead in her winter-white fur coat.</p>
<hr size=1 noshade width=50%>
<p>         She arrives at the lobby of his apartment building and pauses to let<br />
         the mist on her glasses dissolve. When he buzzes her through, she<br />
         takes the tiny mirrored elevator up to his floor. Cramped silver box<br />
         and she is surrounded on all sides, the image of three short women,<br />
         shapeless in long black coats. A pinched, foxy face in triplicate.<br />
         Stray snowflakes glisten, melting in her tangled hair, escaping from<br />
         three identical braids. The elevator creaks and shudders to the top<br />
         floor, and she avoids her own eyes in the spotted glass, relieved when<br />
         the door slides open. He lives at the end of the narrow, rust-carpeted<br />
         hallway, and when he opens the door a wave of heat and the oppressive<br />
         scent of clementines creep out like dazed prisoners. He hovers near<br />
         the entrance, unobtrusive as a shadow, and as always protests that<br />
         Alex shouldn&#8217;t have come, that she must have nicer things to do, all<br />
         the while waiting anxiously for her to come in so that he can close<br />
         the door behind her. He waves a trembling, puffy hand toward the coat<br />
         stand, indicating that she should hang her things up. &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry<br />
         dear,&#8221; he begins, breathless, tugging at the frazzled edges of his<br />
         burnt straw hair, &#8220;I&#8217;m just such a wreck today. I know I must look a<br />
         sight&#8230;and this place,&#8221; he gestures hopelessly at the dusty carpet<br />
         covered in crumpled tissues and dried gold trails of clementine<br />
         peelings, &#8220;I just can&#8217;t seem to keep up with anything.&#8221; He begins this<br />
         way every time.</p>
<p><!â€"-nextpageâ€"-></p>
<p>         They proceed with this familiar ritual of his apologies and her<br />
         reassurances, until he is satisfied that he is forgiven and they can<br />
         settle on the cluttered couch. He pushes ineffectually at some of the<br />
         mess before dissolving into tears. &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry, I&#8217;m sorry,&#8221; he sobs, &#8220;I<br />
         can&#8217;t help it, I feel so weak, I&#8217;m sorry.&#8221; She has stopped telling him<br />
         that there is no need to apologize, simply holds the spongy hand that<br />
         is not covering his eyes. They are cloudy, his eyes, the colors<br />
         indistinct and bleeding together like watercolors. They seem<br />
         incongruous in his mahogany face, as out of place as she must look in<br />
         this dark shadow of an apartment, clean and healthy, holding his hand<br />
         delicately like a wound.</p>
<p>         Her gaze drifts around the room, not really taking in anything, until<br />
         it alights on the television. He seems to sense what she&#8217;s looking at,<br />
         because he sniffs and pats around for the Kleenex box, asking, &#8220;Is it<br />
         time, dear? Are they on?&#8221; She squeezes his hand before going over to<br />
         turn the volume up. He pats the lumpy corduroy couch, releasing small<br />
         puffs of dust, so that she&#8217;ll settle next to him to watch his girls.<br />
         Stifling a sneeze, Alex sits, drawing her legs up under her like a<br />
         folding chair.</p>
<p>         The four golden girls snipe and quarrel, and he cackles when the<br />
         oldest one makes a particularly rude remark. She reminds Alex of a<br />
         malicious trained squirrel, with her little features bunched up under<br />
         the tight lavender wig. &#8220;Oooh, she&#8217;s such a b-i-t-c-h! Oh, excuse me<br />
         dear, &#8221; he adds coyly. He aims a hazy glance in the direction of<br />
         Alex&#8217;s face. She reaches into her bag and pulls out the net sack of<br />
         clementines she has brought for him, waiting for the next commercial<br />
         to ask if he&#8217;d like some. As he reaches for the bag of fruit, he<br />
         spontaneously begins to tear again. &#8220;Thank you dear, I just love these<br />
         things. They&#8217;re all I can keep down.&#8221;</p>
<p>         When she first started coming, Alex brought food from the Caribbean<br />
         take-out near her apartment: akee and salt fish, roti, sweet fried<br />
         plantain, cow foot soup. Even then, he barely ate anything. He picked<br />
         contentedly, talking all the while, often describing the beach behind<br />
         the house where he grew up. Sucking delicately on the fish bones, he<br />
         repeated how he never learned to swim, afraid of the greedy foam<br />
         fingers that came skittering up the beach to nip at his tiny ankles,<br />
         threatening to drag him under the glinting waves.</p>
<p>         The show comes back on, and he asks her what the tarty character is<br />
         wearing, because the b-i-t-c-h-y old lady has just said she looks like<br />
         a hooker. He giggles appreciatively when Alex describes the tight<br />
         leather dress for him, and reaches for one of the little oranges. The<br />
         peelings fall, gather around his bare, ashy feet in bright drifts. He<br />
         sighs when the commercials start again, popping a section of fruit<br />
         into his mouth. He sucks avidly, extracting every drop of sweet juice,<br />
         then spits the remains into a ragged Kleenex he pulls from the sleeve<br />
         of his blue cardigan. The damp bundle dropped on the floor is full. He<br />
         sucks so fervently Alex imagines the juice being drawn straight into<br />
         his veins, mingling with the infected ebb and flow.</p>
<p>         When the show is finished and the tears inevitably well up again, she<br />
         puts a hand on his arm and gently strokes the skin that has bloomed<br />
         with tell-tale dark stains. His body has become a topographical map of<br />
         illness. The skin is warm and dry, with the rough texture of papyrus.<br />
         When she first heard the words &#8220;Kaposi&#8217;s Sarcoma,&#8221; the name for the<br />
         splotches on his skin, she imagined something beautiful, like a<br />
         stained glass city in the middle of the desert. Hot, silent. A mirage.</p>
<p><!â€"-nextpageâ€"-></p>
<p>         &#8220;Does it look really bad, dear? Do you think anyone could tell?&#8221; He<br />
         asks this every time, and Alex always lies and says no, because it<br />
         doesn&#8217;t really matter anyway. He never leaves the apartment, except to<br />
         go to his medical appointments with her, by taxi. &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; he<br />
         moans whenever she has to help him get dressed to go outside, and he<br />
         clings to her as they shuffle through the drifting snow, with more<br />
         strength than she would have imagined in those sick limbs. He calls<br />
         her his ray of sunshine, his only light. She is uncomfortable with<br />
         these effusions, about the halo he sees above her head, and rubs his<br />
         back silently outside the doctor&#8217;s office. Don&#8217;t, she wants to say,<br />
         just don&#8217;t. It&#8217;s the same feeling she gets in his elevator,<br />
         shifty-eyed and fidgeting, trapped in the triplicate embrace of her<br />
         reflection. Mirror, mirror â€“ what would she ask, anyway?</p>
<p>         &#8220;You want to know how I got it, don&#8217;t you, dear?&#8221; he said once, during<br />
         one of their first sessions in the plastic bucket chairs of a waiting<br />
         room. Turning to look at him, Alex just shook her head silently,<br />
         forgetting that all he would see was a vague bucking of dark and<br />
         light. He seemed to understand anyway and smiled. As he grew thinner,<br />
         this expression had become painfully minimalist, skin sliding over<br />
         jutting bone with the disturbing ease of an expensive, well-oiled<br />
         mechanism.</p>
<p>         &#8220;Well, I wouldn&#8217;t mind knowing!&#8221; He laughed softly for a moment, then<br />
         lapsed into silence, his hands clasped neatly in his lap.</p>
<p>         Unsure of what to say, Alex began to describe her neck-biting<br />
         fantasies. He rarely asked her about her life, but he was fascinated<br />
         by dreams; they often whiled away their waiting room hours, quietly<br />
         describing their dreams to each other with the intimacy of an old<br />
         couple lying awake in their twin beds.</p>
<p>         She was, Alex explained, sometimes just an observer, but most often<br />
         The Girl, in a dim hallway or rank forest, the hot star of red<br />
         blooming at her neck under the sharp pressure that often sent a<br />
         thrilling arrow of pleasure to the corresponding dampness between her<br />
         legs. She left out the last part, about the arousal, just describing<br />
         as best she could the variable surroundings, how she would wait.<br />
         Paralyzed and anxiously expectant, waiting for the indistinct form to<br />
         materialize â€“ from behind a tree, from around the corner, features<br />
         melting and sliding, unimportant, only this tug, this ache, always the<br />
         same, so it was if she said: come.</p>
<p>         When she finished speaking, they sat quietly for a while, both staring<br />
         at the corkboard, covered in a bright, dog-eared patchwork of<br />
         pamphlets, posters, fact sheets. After a moment, he spoke.</p>
<p>         &#8220;I had this beautiful Filipino boyfriend, you know, who used to<br />
         tremble and twitch while he was sleeping; he used to wake up screaming<br />
         every night. Scared me to death every time. I was sooo relieved when<br />
         we broke up, after a couple of months.&#8221; After a moment, he reached<br />
         over and took her hand, squeezing gently as if she were the one in<br />
         need of comfort. &#8220;What a pair,&#8221; he murmured, and Alex didn&#8217;t know who<br />
         he was talking about â€“ his ex-boyfriend and himself, or the two of<br />
         them.</p>
<p><!â€"-nextpageâ€"-></p>
<p>         She has been coming to visit him for five months now. The two women<br />
         she used to have coffee with most days after class have given up<br />
         teasing her, trying to find out who is this mystery lover, this man to<br />
         whom Alex now devotes all her free time.</p>
<p>         At the first volunteer meeting, the coordinator asked each of them why<br />
         they were there. When it was her turn, Alex felt the expectant silence<br />
         swell as she hesitated, waiting for something convincing to come to<br />
         her. The coordinator smiled encouragingly. Faintly dizzy under the<br />
         fluorescent lights, Alex picked a small piece of fluff from the sleeve<br />
         of her sweater, rolled it between damp fingers. Somebody coughed,<br />
         punctuating the silence. Staring at the wrinkled fabric of her skirt,<br />
         Alex finally murmured something vague about having the time as a<br />
         university student and there being so few people willing to visit AIDS<br />
         patients.</p>
<p>         She started with a peer tutoring program years ago in high school, and<br />
         she hasn&#8217;t been able to stop since â€“ burned children, rebellious teen<br />
         mothers, glue-sniffing kids, mentally, physically disabled adults.<br />
         Cuddling stroking advising listening reading explaining holding.<br />
         Giving. Teachers, advisors and friends&#8217; parents marveled, oh what a<br />
         wonderful girl so kind so unselfish, asked her if she wasn&#8217;t getting<br />
         burnt out. Burnt out? In a way it was a soothing image: a crumbling<br />
         charred husk, sooty fragments scooped up by a gust of wind and whirled<br />
         into a colorless sky.</p>
<p>         Alex often remembers the jolt she felt the first time she volunteered<br />
         at the children&#8217;s hospital and someone placed a crying infant in her<br />
         arms. The tiny, straining bundle of wires and tubes slowly relaxed,<br />
         and as it stopped crying Alex felt a sympathetic calm wash over her.<br />
         Her eyelids drooped, as if someone had injected her with a powerful<br />
         tranquilizer. After an hour in the small, overheated room, everything<br />
         had fallen away, even the sounds and images of her parents&#8217; latest<br />
         fight â€“ the insults and screaming, the final crescendo of breaking<br />
         glass and toppling furniture. The silence afterwards. The nurse was<br />
         surprised to find her still there hours later. &#8220;I wish we had time for<br />
         this,&#8221; she sighed, taking the sleeping baby from Alex. Pausing to<br />
         study the girl&#8217;s curiously peaceful face, the nurse added, &#8220;You&#8217;re<br />
         certainly welcome to visit as often as you like.&#8221; Alex spent many<br />
         afternoons of her final year in high school there, pursuing that fix<br />
         with a focused hunger. To give. To give more. It was somehow never<br />
         enough.</p>
<hr size=1 noshade width=50%>
<p>         They spend long mornings and afternoons together, Alex and her mystery<br />
         man, either in the twilight mustiness of his apartment, or, more<br />
         frequently now, under the antiseptic glare of the waiting room lights.<br />
         He told her once that he liked how she just sat quietly, rubbing his<br />
         back. The last buddy chattered nervously all the time, which got on<br />
         his nerves. He hates being at the hospital as it is, always afraid<br />
         someone will recognize him from when he used to nurse there. Alex just<br />
         nods, strokes the sharply-etched wing blades of his shoulders.</p>
<p>         She doesn&#8217;t think compassionate, volunteer companion thoughts. Alex<br />
         imagines white rooms, endless, without borders. Being there alone and<br />
         watching the snow, carefree and alive as it dances past the windows.<br />
         She can never get to this place on her own; she only finds it in<br />
         clinics and the shabby, complicated homes of people who need things<br />
         from her. She watches the clutter fall away, absolved, distilled. A<br />
         room empty and pure, furnished only in light and shadow.</p>
<p><!â€"-nextpageâ€"-></p>
<p>         He tells her about a dream he used to have as a child in Jamaica. The<br />
         hospital room is quiet, high above the lights and noise of the<br />
         darkening, winter afternoon city. His story rambles like careless<br />
         knitting, with dropped stitches and uneven rows. He occasionally<br />
         raises a black-tipped claw for punctuation, weaving in and out of<br />
         focus. &#8220;You know dear, they can tell â€¦ children can always tell if<br />
         you&#8217;re different. They were so nasty â€¦ I spent a lot of time by<br />
         myself â€¦ once I fell and broke my arm and he beat me for being<br />
         stupid.&#8221; He laughs, a ghostly, merry cackle. He tells her about the<br />
         horrible old woman who lived next door, whispered black magic.<br />
         Everyone in the village was afraid of her; she drank chicken&#8217;s blood<br />
         and could heal any illness just by fixing her rheumy blind eyes on the<br />
         spot. On a dare he once ran through her dusty yard shouting curses,<br />
         little mouse heart threatening to explode with fear. He places a<br />
         trembling hand on his chest, as if to show Alex where.</p>
<p>         He explains how these people can control your dreams. &#8220;One night<br />
         I â€¦ dreamt that â€¦ as I ran across her yard, she suddenly appeared in<br />
         front of me â€¦ stretchin&#8217; out her ol&#8217; dry-up hands to catch me â€¦ I sort<br />
         of â€¦ jumped â€¦ into the air, and then I was just flyin&#8217; over her head,<br />
         too high for her short arms to catch me â€¦ the sky â€¦ really stormy and<br />
         I flew into the clouds,&#8221; he gestures toward the ceiling, eyes closed,<br />
         &#8220;and I just felt sooo relieved â€¦ but when I looked back there was this<br />
         huge â€¦ dark bird right behin&#8217; me. No matter how fast I flew, I<br />
         couldn&#8217;t â€¦ escape â€¦ it was like my shadow and I couldn&#8217;t shake it. I<br />
         woke up just as it was â€¦ diggin&#8217; its nasty claws in me â€¦ had â€¦ a<br />
         terrible pain in my side for days â€¦ kept havin&#8217; this dream for years.&#8221;<br />
         He laughs, a vague coughing sound. &#8220;Now I can&#8217;t sleep anymore â€¦ so<br />
         that&#8217;s not a problem.&#8221;</p>
<p>         Smiling, Alex tugs the hospital sheet to cover the cracked, bony feet.<br />
         They remind her of sea-horses, their spiny articulation against the<br />
         white cotton. She remains standing by the bed, watching the faint rise<br />
         and fall of his ribcage, trapped beneath the blankets. His shallow,<br />
         tattered breathing scratches and claws at her.</p>
<p>         The red glow of the digital clock on his bedside table catches her<br />
         eye, and Alex checks the time, though there is nowhere else she&#8217;d<br />
         rather be. 4:32. Her afternoon lecture will be finishing right about<br />
         now. She has been skipping more and more classes as he grows<br />
         increasingly feeble, and now that he is hospitalized, it seems<br />
         impossible to go back to the meaningless drone of the lecture hall.<br />
         The restless buzz that has been eating at her the past few days has<br />
         simply stopped. An incredible calm wells up, envelops her like a fog,<br />
         a magic spell. His hand twitches on the pale blue blanket, and she<br />
         reaches over to hold it. This is what it would be like, she thinks, to<br />
         be at the center of an egg, or the eye of a storm: perfectly balanced,<br />
         needing nothing.</p>
<p>         A nurse bustles in, does something with the tangle of wires and tubing<br />
         that connects him to food, air. She wears a mask and gloves. Her peach<br />
         cotton uniform peeks out from beneath the drab green protective smock.<br />
         She turns to Alex, and the freckled skin around her eyes wrinkles<br />
         suddenly. Alex realizes that the nurse is smiling at her, and curves<br />
         her lips in return. &#8220;It&#8217;s nice to see someone in here,&#8221; the nurse<br />
         whispers. He hasn&#8217;t had any visitors in the week since he was<br />
         admitted. There isn&#8217;t anyone. &#8220;My mother always told me not to be<br />
         chat-chattin&#8217; your business at work,&#8221; he explained to Alex when she<br />
         asked why none of his former colleagues came to visit after he stopped<br />
         nursing. The family was all still in Jamaica, and he was adamant that<br />
         they never find out. &#8220;Trust me, darlin&#8217; â€“ they would rather think I was<br />
         married to a white woman, than dying of this.&#8221; This was one of his<br />
         favorite jokes. Alex was sure his family would be thrilled if he were<br />
         married to any woman at all. She said nothing, curled up in the chair<br />
         by the bed. It would have been awful, she knew, if there had been<br />
         anyone else â€“ the crying, the shouting, the messy grief. This way it<br />
         was perfect, just the two of them, in the quiet, gull-colored room.</p>
<p><!â€"-nextpageâ€"-></p>
<p>         Evening begins to stain the corners of the room with shadows. Outside<br />
         the snow whirls, thick-feathered and profuse. The storm&#8217;s billowing<br />
         silence wraps them in a mantle of peace: this thin, dark form in the<br />
         hospital bed and this woman touching his foot. A metal food trolley<br />
         rattles to a halt outside the room, and the swampy smells of<br />
         institutional food waft in from the slightly open door. Alex settles<br />
         back in the plastic chair, watches the icy window dim as the day<br />
         wanes. There is a dull ache in her throat, a slowly mounting pressure.<br />
         She does not notice when his narrow chest ceases to rise and fall in<br />
         the nest of wool and cotton. She does not notice these things falling<br />
         away.</p>
<p>         She imagines: teeth, delicately piercing the skin.</p>
<p>         She imagines: a frail boy airborne in a warm tropical sky, Technicolor<br />
         and punctuated with bruised-looking clouds. The air thick with the<br />
         smell of burning flowers, a drunken perfume faintly sexual, menacing.<br />
         He beats at the heavy air, struggling, smooth brown skin covered in a<br />
         damp sheen of fear, struggling to elude the dusky bird following his<br />
         electric movement rapturously, like a lover.
      </p>
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